Posthumanismissa esiintyminen on esittÀmistÀ, sosiaalisuus on mainontaa ja molempia pohjustaa omasta identiteetistÀÀn unelmoiva itseilmaisu. NÀin muodostuu moderni kyborgi-identiteetti, jonka ajattelusta ja omakuvan rakentumisesta suuri osa tapahtuu digitaalisissa ympÀristöissÀ.
Essee kÀsittelee internetin vÀlittÀmÀn kanssakÀymisen sosiaalisuuden ominaisuuksia ja arvoja. EsitÀn, ettÀ sen sijaan ettÀ esiinnymme itse, olemme irtaannuttaneet itsestÀmme sosiaalisia tekijöitÀ toimimaan puolestamme. Rakentuessaan teknokapitalistisille alustoille nÀmÀ tekijÀt pohjautuvat juuri niihin arvoihin, toki sosio-kulttuuristen kehysten ohjauksessa.
Kehittelemiemme identiteettien kuluttajina ovat tuttavat ja tuntemattomat mutta ensisijaisesti me itse.
â
There seems to be a complex interrelation between social actors, self-advertising and capitalism in context of the modern cybernetic spaces.
Arguing through sociality as a commodity, I explore the online “social” as a medium to one’s identity. The values of this cybernetic circuit are capitalist. The modern Cyborg Identity may be constructed through consumption of the virtualised self; the ‘real self’ formation of which virtual environments welcomes.
Online Sociality
in Age of Technocapitalism
and the
Consumerist Cyborg Identity
Ville Niemi
2016
Terminology
Introduction
I
Online Sociality in the Age of Technocapitalism
Minds as Actors in Cyberspace
Online Sociality as a Manifestation of Technocapitalism
New Sociality: Criticism on Motives of âSocialâ Media
II
The Consumerist Cyborg Identity
Social Actors as Advertisements and Self-Branding
Curation of Social Actors as Means for Self-affirmation through Fantasies
Conclusion
Bibliography
Introduction
In part one, I will first discuss the origin of âsocial actorsâ, the condition of virtuality, and present the basic cybernetic condition of computer-mediated communication online. As social actors work on behalf of us in the cyberspace, I will discuss whether mediated sociality is truly social as it was earlier considered. Approving Couldry and Van Dijcke’s proposition the newly established âsocialâ media as of a techno-economic materiality, where perceived social interaction (social actors) is commodified. I will identify the new digital social as consumerist, creating false âsocialâ needs for sake of economical welfare.
Part two begins with analysis of the new social as sole advertising, moving onto shifting our idea of ourselves, leading us to self-brand ourselves in attempts of creating a better commodity in model of market relations. I will discuss cyberspace in relation to self-exploration and experimenting, making the point that the liberation of the mind into social actors allows for manipulation firstly of the media form, and secondly of our own conception of ourselves. This I identify as a cyborg identity, ultimately curated, commodified, and consumed. Arguing that the âreal selfâ is a virtual construction, I will elaborate that the availability of cybernetic spaces within which to construct these concepts, carries core relation to our own ontology, and that within the cyberspace âsocialâ interactions are in fact subsidiary to the act of self-creation and consumption of our fantasies: self-affirmation through self-commodification.
Terminology
I prefer to use the â admittedly outdated term â from 1980’s science-fiction of âcyberspaceâ instead of solely talking about âonlineâ, for the word carries significant connotations as to cybernetics and to space as an environment, a room1 even, elaborating much better the ideas that I try to express. The mundane alternative âonlineâ emphasises too much connectivity rather than disembodiment, although âbeing onlineâ expresses quite well the idea of being somewhere.
Nusselder (2009) describes cyberspace as a ârealm of immaterial data that exists independently of the computers and networks, of the hardware, the software, and the human wetwareâ, and in my understanding too, cyberspace is a cybernetic space, a virtual dimension in which our âbodies become liberatedâ in cyborgian sense, emphasising mind over matter.
As to social interactions online, I will be following the footsteps of Couldry and Van Dijcke by criticising the online sociality as âsocialâ. They well elaborate how the platforms we see as purely social, are in fact âan effect of a techno-economic materialityâ.
The âreal selfâ is a person’s understanding of themselves, the self that they feel they are. Turner (1976) and Davis (2003) present this term as a self-conception constructed through sensations and feelings rather than by the old-fashioned idea of institutions or social relations.
âSocial actorsâ within the cyberspace are our mediations, parts of our âreal selfâ, which act independently and allow for post-humanistic distribution of our being. Any act of creating virtual data is a virtualisation of one’s mind, creating digitally interactable data objects, which in terms of social interaction act as our social representatives.
âSocial-sharing sitesâ are websites, nature of which is well described by the chief revenue officer of Thought Catalog, Alex Magnin, in an interview with Marikar (2014): âa lot of it is clicky headlines and shareable headlines, and shareable headlines that play with certain identities or badges that people want to share with their friends to self-representâ. Emotion-based media with social aspects and topics, leading onto immediate and transitory desires, fulfilling the contemporary need for âsocialityâ.
I
Online Sociality in the Age of Technocapitalism
Minds as Actors in Cyberspace
â’The body is obsoleteâ, proclaims Stelarc (2013) with his performance art, and this ideology is the transhumanistsâ fundamental approach regarding the future. When the role of the physical entity is lessened, surely something is highlighted â what is to replace the bodyâs importance in human contact/communication?â (Niemi, 2013).
In computer systems the user is assigned a role of a participant. When we interact with the system, we translate ourselves into the array, becoming part of the feedback loop rather than solely taking control. In words of Haraway (1991, p.178), in such a cybernetic system âthere is no fundamental, ontological separationâ between the technical and organic in this knowledge. In a similar manner in the act of designing a system in which our minds become a part of the cybernetic space, the âprimacy of human elements in a socio-technical scenario is rejectedâ (Mackay, 1995, p.44), leading to a construction and understanding of an each participant as a mere actor within the system. This is regarded as the ‘actor network’ theory, and when re-constructing social interactions in the cyberspace in this manner, âcommunication is reduced to the word as body-free representation of the Selfâ (Simanowski, 2003). These representations of ourselves become the social actors in our virtual networks, creating a âsecond, parallel worldâ (Nusselder, 2009, p.26). His idea of cyberspace as âan information space in which the data are already presentâ allows for our mediations to exist independently without our presence, waiting for us to just every now and then harvest them. When âweâ âareâ in the cyberspace always accessible for interaction, the constitution of us and our social ontology becomes vague.
Online Sociality as a Manifestation of Technocapitalism
When offering a âformal and abstractâ framework of a âsocial establishmentâ, Goffman (1956, p.152) states that it is âany place surrounded by fixed barriers to perception in which a particular kind of activity regularly takes placeâ. With this text alone we could agree that true sociality also applies to digitalised social interactions. Considering Goffman’s 1950’s knowledge of cybernetic social spaces, however â and to exaggerate, the digital â in a modern context of technocapitalism Coudlry and Van Dijke’s (2015, p.3) analysis seems more relevant, as they state that:
âThe âsocialâ as newly defined becomes an effect of online sociality rather than the other way around: flows of data are triggered to produce systems of economic gainâsystems that revolve around the accumulation of attention and a sustained, if implied, claim that accumulated attention (as measured) is social value.â
In this perspective the sociality of the cyberspace is not real but rather a mere capitalistic hoax, to be extreme. âSocialâ actions are those of alertness and availability about something seemingly social. They convict the motives of a corporation to conduct âsocialâ interactions as means for âdatafication, manipulation and commoditisationâ of the reality. Considering that our social actors are formatted as data, stored digitally somewhere out of our reach2 open for interception or analysis as big data and targeted advertising, this seems true.
Goffman’s (1956) âabstractâ framework could be applied to validate cyberspaces as social establishments, even featuring what he defines as âsocial frontâ and âbackstageâ. He defines it as âany placeâ and one could interpret the technical limitations of interaction as âparticular kindâ, and the mundaneness of social media use as âregular activityâ. However, according to contemporary writing by Terranova, Couldry and Van Dijcke and Suarez-Villa, even Baudrillard, the values of modern âsocialâ do not respond to the real human needs. Thus the modern âsocialâ will have to be, due to our adaptation of technology as well as the technological condition of ourselves, interpret as something different than in the time and context of Goffman. Today, the âsocialâ is as a manifestation of âtechno-economic materialityâ, as Couldry and Van Dijcke would put it. Terranova (2000, p.47) argues that in the modern cyberspace âhyperreality confirms the humanist nightmare of a society without humanity, the culmination of a progressive taking over of the realm of representation.â Our concept or real sociality is blurred as the cyberspace is characterised by relation to the limits of, and even superseding, the real social. According to Suarez-Villa (2009, p.152) democratic accountability is required to make technocapitalism more âresponsive to human needsâ, suggesting too that the pursue towards digitally connected sociality pays no respect to real social interaction, but rather has âfallen in the register of supply and demandâ (Baudrillard 1999, p.91)
New Sociality: Criticism on Motives of âSocialâ Media
Marikar (2014) describes in her New York Times article, that social-sharing sites are is a movement towards âan Internet that aims to lift up, not take downâ. In her article, she also interviews a founder3 of a similar website, who states that he wants âto post stuff most people will enjoyâ, and that if emotional reaction arises, it is âtheir natural psychological reaction to pass that on so their friends can feel it too.â Newton (2012) writes that Thought Catalog’s appeal for its readers lies in the ânotion of shared experiences and culture-based sentamentality. [sic]â Perhaps this could be seen as the new sociality: shared experiences and mediated relationships seasoned with empathetic, pseudo-social nature. An article by Serra (2014) on Thought Catalog criticises social interaction online: âconstantly having access to anything we think we need or want at that moment, especially social interaction, becomes too much to handle and is technically not even real â it is cyber interaction.â
In her (populistic) article Serra argues through Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs that only meaningful relationships are necessary as to survival. Her view is that social media allows âus to access too much information and is handicapping us as a functioning society.â Ironically, her writing is indeed published on a website described as a social-sharing site, focal function of which is to specifically create desirable content, which does not really help out on the issue of âtoo much informationâ that she finds frustrating.
Considering the type of these cyberspaces, in a Forbes article and an interview by Newton (2012), the founder of Thought Catalog, Chris Lavergne, clearly states that they constantly strive for finding a âbalance between commercial success and quality workâ â with no regards to sociality. Although Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook, has stated that their company’s mission is one of a more humanistic nature, âto make everything socialâ, Coudlry and Van Dijcke (2015, p.3) critisise that his definition of the âsocialâ is one that I have above elaborated on, and that Zuckerberg âreally meant: to move social traffic onto a networked infrastructure where it becomes traceable, calculable, and so manipulable for profit.â These examples illustrate that the new construction of âsocialâ lacks real sociality and is primarily based on and formulated by capitalist motives. Considering Couldry and Van Dijke’s suggestion that the âsocialâ is manipulated, very much in the same way as the smoking industry introduced additives4 which could increase the addictiveness of cigarettes (Rabinoff et.al, 2008), social media might contain algorithms of similar nature. Not much research into the addictive nature of the actual technicalities has been conducted, but Brookes (2015, p.1) writes that âpractitioner articles and news stories have commented on the addicting and distracting nature of social media.â In relation to social-sharing sites, chief revenue officer of Thought Catalog, Alex Magnin, actually admits (Marikar, 2014) that their âclicky headlines and shareable headlines — play with certain identities or badges that people want to share with their friends to self-representâ, further verifying the idea that although the interaction is about sharing with friends, it is not based purely social motives.
Bridging the gap between real and mediated social interactions, modern technologies give rise to new âsocialâ needs, in which the media âobfuscates itself as a mediumâ and âclaims a real presenceâ (Nusselder, 2009, p.28). Ultimately changing our perception of what âsocialâ means, technocapitalists’ business models, motivations of which Suarez-Villa is sceptical about, are prominent in the shaping of our human needs in the early age of information-mediated communication.
II
Social Actors as Advertisements and Self-Branding
Goffman (1956, p.13) refers to social âperformanceâ as âall the activity of an individual which occurs during a period marked by his continuous presence before a particular set of observers and which has some influence on the observers.â In the cyberspace, presence and influence can be manipulated by the participant, as they come in form of media, highly editable and constructable. In regards to Baudrillard (1999, p.40):
âA subsequent stage is crossed once the very language of the social — becomes confused with this fascinating solicitation of an agitated language, once the social turns itself into advertising, turns itself over to the popular vote by trying to impose its trademark image.â
In these terms, within the capitalist cyberspace our social actors’ âsocialityâ has become synonymous with advertising. To exemplify this in terms of popularity of a social actor, in Marikar’s (2014) interview Alex Magnin5 states that âevery writer wants to do well, and âdo wellâ means get more Twitter followers.â In our personalised experiences of networking, this is also valid on an individual level. Being capable to yell out to the digital world to an audience of potentially millions has changed our concept of social groups and status. Along with having grown the need to be âsocialâ and always available to give a ârapid responseâ (Turkle, 2007), Baudrillard (1999, p.91) claims that there is also a demand to advertise one’s message (which the medium has become). He continues by claiming that âadvertising is completely in unison with the socialâ. Thus a need to advertise the social self also means a need for self-branding, every act of social becoming marketing. Davis (2003, p.41) elaborates on the two possible meanings of self-commodification:
âA first is that self-understanding is mediated by the consumption of goods and images. In this sense, self-definition depends on the appropriation of the traits of commodities. — A second meaning of self-commodification involves the reorganization of our personal lives and relationships on the model of market relations This adaptation is well illustrated by the recent practice of âpersonal branding,â — Both of these meanings of self-commodification concern the terms in which we define ourselves and our well-being…â
Gomez Cruz and Thornham (2015:2) state:
The selfie has been understood in relation to rapid âdocumentingâ of the self as a âsocio-cultural revolutionâ about âidentity affirmationâ a âconditionâ of social media, a political convergence of the object and subject of photographic practice, and as a neoliberal, even narcissistic but increasingly normative mode of âself-branding.â
Curation of Social Actors as Means for Self-affirmation through Fantasies
As a digitally formatted being one might brand or curate themselves as â not just something that they are not â but something that they want to become. This goes along with the lines of Nusselder (2009, p.11), who mentions Sherry Turkle’s writing on the potential of cyberspace offering a possibility for self-exploring and a âplaygroundâ for experimenting with one’s identity. According to Nusselder, this mental environment can in âFreudo-Lacanian terminologyâ be understood as a âwindow for gaining insight into what actually is the object of desire.â In these terms, the creation of a selfie is in fact a creation of an interface, a media through which to identify one’s desires and explore personal identity. Additionally, considering the modern self-centred understanding of the âreal selfâ, I argue that the most important audience of selfies is actually the very self. One’s relation to their social actors within a Lacanian context are fantasies, as expressed by Nusselder (2009, p.29):
âthis dynamic can be translated as the erotic desire that has as its goal a realization of fantasy. Then fantasy, which normally is a vital support of desire, becomes an opaque screen turning the reality of the desiring subject into a lure.â
The lure in the contexts of selfies is our ideal conceptualisation of our image objects, most desired by their creators. Our personal conversation with our social actors is the most vital part of the cybernetic function: producing, designing, distributing, and finally harvesting feedback of the social actor. During these phases of a media artefact, ultimately happens the construction of identity in its three areas of âhow we see ourselvesâ, âhow we would hope others see usâ and âhow others really see usâ (Wood and Smith, 2001:47 in Puranen, 2016:27). In other words, each social actor uploaded to the cyberspace becomes a part of identity, nudging towards the post-humanistic viewpoint of a distributed mind and a multi-existential identity.
Davis (2003, p.42) emphasises individualism as he presents concepts of âreal selfâ by Ralph Turner and âantinomian personalityâ by Nathan Adler, discussing scholars’ findings in what constitutes the self as shifts from âinstitutionalâ to âimpulseâ. He explains that the âolder institutions of identity formationâ became destabilised and that the social identities formed in those contexts became less important. This gave room for the new âreal selfâ to be all about âunsocialised, inner impulsesâ, emotions. In practice, this means that the âsocially-derived identity criteria and the social recognition of others is in principle denied.â (Davis, 2003, p.44), setting aside the notion that identity in the cyberspace would be constructed through social interactions, but rather the practice of the âsocialâ.
As to the notion of the cyborg identity, the role of social media and online sociality is curious. The notion of self-affirmation through self-commodification should be further explored. There seems to be a complex interrelation between social actors, self-advertising and capitalism in context of the modern cybernetic spaces.
Conclusion
The affordance of a technology to âprojectâ, be it in visual sense or as manipulative construction, is nowadays easier than ever. To expand on Gomez Cruz and Thornham’s (2015, p.2) writing in regards to selfies, I find that this applies to the idea of self-branding and self-identity in our cybernetic environments too, that our social (media) actors âresonate wider socio-cultural, political, and visual practices and how we approach them has political, ideological, and cultural significance.â
Selfies are a brilliant example of the commodification of the âsocialâ human of today, image objects self-consumable for self-affirmation. Lessig (1999) stated in that âCode is lawâ, but in an increasingly mediated society, code is also our social front, (re-)defining our manners, appearances and our settings for all social performance, ultimately making âsocialityâ more distributed, demanded, but controversially with regards to an all-individualised mentality of the self.
Through the re-setting of what is social, we find our disembodied mind, our social actors, as fantasy objects self-curated and highly manipulated. This is the new âsocialâ, one in which we indeed are âalone togetherâ (Turkle, 2012), but more importantly for the sake of our very self.
This is the very basis of which Davis and Turner find as the key in self-affirmation of one’s identity, pleasures and emotion, impulses. To view social media practice within the context of their ideology, selfies as an interface to narcissism seem to be a very efficient way to create consumables, which in turn are consumed for the sake of affirming identity. Nusselder (2009, p.14) argues that online virtual worlds are âan expression of fantasyâ, a statement which Turkle and Baudrillard would surely agree with. Offering a field for self-exploring and âsocialâ relations, the selfie-commodity proposes a post-humanistic movement of construction of oneself as (multi-)mediation. Gomez Cruz and Thorhnam (2015, p.2) share this line of thought as to the significance of selfies, and it has all the potential to â if it has not already â shift our social ontology and practices. Whatever social means in the modern context.
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- 1 In Finnish the evolution of my thinking was: âKyberavaruusâ – âKyberneettinen avaruusâ – âKyberneettinen tilaâ
- 2 âThere is no such thing as âthe cloud,â itâs just somebody elseâs computerâ
- 3 Scott DeLong, ViralNova
- 4 100 out of 599 documented of additives âhave pharmacological actions that — could increase the addictivenessâ
- 5 From Thought Catalog